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How the world’s billionaires are helping fight the coronavirus pandemic

01 April 2020 - 04:39 pm

How the world’s billionaires are helping fight the coronavirus pandemic

As the COVID-19 outbreak escalates, donations have started pouring in from deep-pocketed companies and wealthy individuals.

How the world’s billionaires are helping fight the coronavirus pandemic

As the COVID-19 outbreak escalates, donations have started pouring in from deep-pocketed companies and wealthy individuals.

As confirmed cases of COVID-19 increase worldwide, some of the planet’s wealthiest are donating millions to help health authorities combat the disease.

The coronavirus pandemic has paralysed countries across the globe, infecting half a million people and killing more than 24,000 – and it shows little sign of slowing down.

Here’s how the world’s billionaires are deploying their dollars:

Bill & Melinda Gates

On 5 February, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced that it will immediately commit up to US$100 million for the global response to COVID-19.

The funding will help strengthen detection, isolation and treatment efforts; protect at-risk populations in Africa and South Asia; and accelerate the development of vaccines, treatments and diagnostics.

The new funding is inclusive of US$10 million the foundation committed to the outbreak in late January.

Jack Ma

China’s richest man announced a donation of US$14.5 million on platform Weibo.
US$5.8 million of this sum will go to two Chinese government research organisations to support their work in creating a vaccine.

“We know that the battle between humanity and disease is a long journey,” Ma’s foundation said in a post on its Weibo account.

“This money will help various medical research efforts and help disease prevention.”

The Alibaba founder later donated an additional US$2.15 million to the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Australia, to help fund the development of a vaccine.

On 19 March, The Jack Ma Foundation and the Alibaba Foundation announced a joint donation of two million masks, 150,000 test kits, 20,000 sets of protective gear and 20,000 face shields to four countries in South–East Asia.

The following day, he announced that a further two million masks, 400,000 test kits and 104 ventilators would be delivered to 24 Latin American countries. Russia is the latest country to receive a gift from Ma, with more than a million face masks and 200,000 coronavirus testing kits arriving on 27 March.

Jeff Bezos

Bezos’ retail giant Amazon has invested US$20 million in the AWS Diagnostic Development Initiative to bring COVID-19 tests to the market faster.

The company is also hiring for 100,000 new full-time and part-time positions across the US to meet the surge in demand and increasing wages, with an additional US$2 per hour in America and pay increases worldwide.

“This isn’t business as usual, and it’s a time of great stress and uncertainty,” Bezos wrote in an Instagram post.

“It’s also a moment in time when the work we’re doing is at its most critical.

“Our current work with WHO includes: increasing capacity and security for the WHO website; providing ML & AI for WHO’s Epidemic Intelligence from Open Sources initiative; assisting with the translation and transcription of WHO’s knowledge catalogue; providing logistics support.”

Amazon donated US$1 million to emergency COVID-19 funds in Washington, D.C., created a US$5 million relief fund for small businesses and contributed US$1 million to a new Seattle foundation to help those affected by COVID-19.

Michael Dell

The tech giant that carries his surname donated an initial sum of US$284,000 to provide a range of medical supplies to hospitals across China.

“We are now in the process of extending our support in China, delivering an in-kind IT infrastructure donation valued at ¥6 million (US$853,000) to the Hubei Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in China,” the company announced on its website.

“We have set aside another US$3 million in funds and in-kind technology donations to help meet the greatest needs of our communities and the front-line organizations working to treat and contain COVID-19 around the world.

“As the situation evolves, we will continue to assess opportunities to leverage our technology to deliver support where it is needed most.”

Li Ka-Shing

On 10 February, Hong Kong’s richest man said he would donate US$13 million to help frontline medical workers in Wuhan.

The Li Ka-Shing Foundation is also working to source medical supplies for healthcare workers in Wuhan and Hong Kong.

Li plans to make his donation to the Red Cross Society of China, a government-organised non-government organisation (GONGO) with no connection to The American Red Cross, according to Bloomberg.

Fortune reported that healthcare workers in Wuhan, including at one of the temporary hospitals built in eight days, reported not having received any help from The Wuhan Red Cross, a subsidiary of the Red Cross of China, despite an outpouring of donations to the group.

Bernard Arnault

The luxury goods tycoon is converting three of LVMH’s perfume factories to manufacture hand sanitiser instead of fragrances.

The sanitiser will be distributed for free to French authorities and Europe’s largest hospital system.

LVMH has committed to supplying at least 40 million masks to France, paying approximately US$5.4 million for the first week’s delivery.

Originally from the Gold Coast, Holly moved to Sydney to pursue a career in journalism. She worked across Signature Media’s five travel publications before joining The CEO Magazine, where she now creates digital content across the travel, lifestyle, business and luxury segments.

The CEO Magazine is more than a business title; it’s a source of information, inspiration and motivation for the world’s most successful leaders, executives, investors and entrepreneurs. Our content creates conversations, our voice is the one that matters.